Describes a study undertaken in 1996 to examine interlibrary loan and document supply request failures in the UK and Ireland. The project surveyed 54 public, university and special libraries, monitoring and categorizing their failed requests and their failures to supply items requested from them. Differences in rates and nature of request failure between libraries of different types and for different types of material were examined. Data were simultaneously collected on requests passing through the British Library Document Supply Centre, reply codes were monitored and analysed, and operational systems and procedures examined. Conclusions were drawn and recommendations made at a national policy level and at the operational, practice‐based level. At national level they include access strategies, acquisitions and retention policies, and resource discovery strategies. At operational level they focus on the submission of requests, the use, management and maintenance of databases and catalogues, and technical standards.
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1 December 1997
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Interlending & Document Supply
Research Article|
December 01 1997
Why requests fail
David Parry
David Parry
Independent Research Consultant for CONARLS
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-5848
Print ISSN: 0264-1615
© MCB UP Limited
1997
Interlending & Document Supply (1997) 25 (4): 147–156.
Citation
Parry D (1997), "Why requests fail". Interlending & Document Supply, Vol. 25 No. 4 pp. 147–156, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02641619710194289
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